Report of a Journey Around the World. 35 



Locomotion: Jl'hcel and other t)-ansport; sl^ates and shok' slices; naviga- 

 tion {boats, s/iifis, paddles, etc.); horse gear (harness, bits, shoes, spurs, 

 stirrups); whips and flagella; staves; cradles and baby carriers. 



Domestic appliances, etc.: Tools (cutting, drilling, sawifig, rasping, etc. ); 

 spoons, forks, knives; locks and keys; measures of zveight, ti^ne, etc.; 

 currency; zvriting and primitive records; dTcellings; head-rests; surgi- 

 cal appliances; medicine; uietallurgy {bronze and iron). 



III. ARTS OF PLEASURE. 



Personal adornment: Toilet gear, mirrors, combs, cosmetics; tatuing; artifi- 

 cial defoliation {head, lips, ears, nose, feet); hair and hair d/rssing. 



Personal ornaments: Ornaments of shell, bones and teeth of animals, vege- 

 table substance; armlets and leglets; belts and sashes; pouches, beads 

 and beadioork ; feather work; torques; riiigs; penan>iular rings; fibu- 

 lae; ring brooches; pins; cloak fasteners. 



Tobacco and hemp smoking, etc.: Narcotics and stimulants. 



Musical instruments: Percussion (rattles, gongs, bells, drums, etc.); ivind 

 (syrinx, cohistles, reed instruments, trumpets); stringed (musical bozc, 

 harps, zithers, dulcimers, guitars, fiddles, etc.); masks {dancing, cere- 

 monial, dramatic). 



Art: (,'raphic and plastic art; development of ornament and patterns; ani- 

 mal form in art; human form in art; zoomorphic, phyllomorphic 

 designs; geometric patterns; loop, coil, and fret patterns; influence of 

 textiles on designs, etc. 



IV. MAGIC AND RELIGION. 



Magic, sorcery, etc.; divination; primitive religion; oriental religions; 

 e.v votos; treatment of the dead ; lear trophies. 



V. CEREMONIAL IMPLEMENTS. 



A very interesting Hawaiian idol is in this museum ; the in- 

 scription states that it was given to the Ashmolean Museum by 

 the Rev. Andrew Bloxam, M.A., Worcester College, Oxford, in 

 1826, and from there it came to the Pitt-Rivers Museum. It is 

 33.6 inches high and was obtained from the Hale o Keawe at 

 Honaunau, Hawaii, at the time of the visit of the Blonde, on 

 which Bloxam was chaplain. Fig. 33. 



As at the younger university the library was not passed by, 

 and the Bodleian delighted us with its treasures — antiques in a 

 suitably ancient setting. We were also taken to see the boat races, 



